The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 98, 565-582, Copyright, 1953, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York


ARTICLE

REGRESSION OF TRANSPLANTED LYMPHOMAS INDUCED IN VIVO BY MEANS OF NORMAL GUINEA PIG SERUM : I. COURSE OF TRANSPLANTED CANCERS OF VARIOUS KINDS IN MICE AND RATS GIVEN GUINEA PIG SERUM, HORSE SERUM, OR RABBIT SERUM



John G. Kidd M.D.1

1 From the Department of Pathology, The New York Hospital—Cornell Medical Center, New York

In the experiments here described transplanted lymphomas of two kinds regularly regressed following repeated injections of normal guinea pig serum intraperitoneally into mice carrying them, the animals meanwhile remaining lively and devoid of signs of illness or wasting. The lymphomas of untreated control mice, by contrast, usually grew progressively and killed their hosts within 20 to 30 days, and the same was true of the growth of other mice given repeated injections of horse serum or rabbit serum.

In similar experiments, the cells of a transplanted lymphosarcoma of rats were temporarily kept from proliferating by repeated intraperitoneal injections of guinea pig serum, though the cells of two transplanted mammary carcinomas of mice, and those of fibrosarcoma, grew unimpeded in hosts likewise treated.

Additional experiments related to the phenomenon here described, and a discussion of the findings as a whole, are given in an associated paper.

Submitted on July 30, 1953


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